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Mar 19, 2012
03/12
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and it's clear whether you believe in moore's law or some other law, it's clear that the information technology is growing exponentially and we are becoming incredibly dependant upon it. most of our infrastructure is unabled by the internet. and i mean look even in the financial markets in new york the al g al go algorithmic trad. as a nation we have become extraordinarily te city dependae net. and if we are that dependant on that capability i'm alarmed at our ain't t ability to defend i. >> you are surprised that an english professor became the joint chief. >> i'm alarmed that i became the joint chief. >> i found it to be extraordinary preparation for me. >> i don't know if you read mr. greenburg's book. i was rereading through the moment and what an enormous change it made in the way we interacted with theism pacthe impactsthe impactr lives. it was a very pe persuasive boo. what is it about our moment in history that would be that swerve? and by the way it could be something in cyber. and so the study of lit tur whic --literature and it's the f how people lived. country to history. as peter f
and it's clear whether you believe in moore's law or some other law, it's clear that the information technology is growing exponentially and we are becoming incredibly dependant upon it. most of our infrastructure is unabled by the internet. and i mean look even in the financial markets in new york the al g al go algorithmic trad. as a nation we have become extraordinarily te city dependae net. and if we are that dependant on that capability i'm alarmed at our ain't t ability to defend i....
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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118
Jan 9, 2012
01/12
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we use off the shelf internet technology, and we trance form the power grid, the transmission grid of europe, germany and europe into an energy internet that actually, that acts exactly like the internet so when millions of buildings in germa are storg their own energy, storing hydrogen like you store media and digital and if they don't need some of that energy they can share it like the internet to the door steps of russia and five is plug and transport, fuel cell vehicles in three years so you will be able to plug in your vehicles anywhere, get green electricity from the grid or sell your own back. >> rose: at is the time line for this? in jeremy theyre moving quick and testing the energy internet in six regions and created hundreds of thousands of new jobs, i would say on infrastructure in place, by 20-20 five, and they are definily leaded the world into this new e.r.a. >> how long will we immediate fossil fuel is. >> the problem is the crisis we are facing i think we haven't come to grips with and the real earthquake was july of 2008, remember when oil hit $147 a barrel and everyo
we use off the shelf internet technology, and we trance form the power grid, the transmission grid of europe, germany and europe into an energy internet that actually, that acts exactly like the internet so when millions of buildings in germa are storg their own energy, storing hydrogen like you store media and digital and if they don't need some of that energy they can share it like the internet to the door steps of russia and five is plug and transport, fuel cell vehicles in three years so...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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232
May 7, 2012
05/12
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private corporation like exxon mobile, your opportunities increasingly lie in high-risk areas, frontier technology issues involving deep water, ago tk and over difficult climate conditions. and so it's sort of, exxon mobile prides itself and has a record to just few some of this pride that in their peer group they are very disciplined operators. their record is a lot better now than it was at the time of the exxon valdez and yet they have accidents. their pipelines burst, their spill os kur, maybe their systems are stronger so they could contain them at a certainly level. but the reality is that this is sort of like aviation in the 19 30ss. you know, we figured out what airplane kos do by having a bunch of craves. >> private empire is an interesting tight el. and appropriate tight el. exxon mobile and american power. how are they different than you thought you might discover. where were your conceptions changed or affirmed. >> i sort of assumed that it couldn't be through that they were just an instrument of the bush administration or aligned in some way. but i didn't quite know what the alter-- a
private corporation like exxon mobile, your opportunities increasingly lie in high-risk areas, frontier technology issues involving deep water, ago tk and over difficult climate conditions. and so it's sort of, exxon mobile prides itself and has a record to just few some of this pride that in their peer group they are very disciplined operators. their record is a lot better now than it was at the time of the exxon valdez and yet they have accidents. their pipelines burst, their spill os kur,...
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Jan 27, 2012
01/12
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again, investing in those technologies that we need re going forward. and most importantly, continuing to keep the faith with the force. >> charlie: panetta is new to this team even though he's at the cia. >> yes. >> charlie: give me a sense of it. what is it that you think you people have? is it trust, is it nobody's trying to fight for turf? what is it? >> i think it's a number of things. one is the tone set by the president. the president insists on having things come to him in an organized systematic way, in ways that have been fully consider by all the important perspectives, number one. and he does set the tone. frankly if you went in to the president and said i would like to make x, y and z decision and you were a cabinet member, he would say well have you talked to leon. have you rn through tom's process. what are all the angles here, why isn't it written down. he demands and expects decisions come to him in a timely but fully considered way. so he sets the ton, i think. second, i think is the process we've set up where we've tried, we have set
again, investing in those technologies that we need re going forward. and most importantly, continuing to keep the faith with the force. >> charlie: panetta is new to this team even though he's at the cia. >> yes. >> charlie: give me a sense of it. what is it that you think you people have? is it trust, is it nobody's trying to fight for turf? what is it? >> i think it's a number of things. one is the tone set by the president. the president insists on having things come...
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Apr 20, 2012
04/12
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KRCB
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, going to the cloud or change in technologies where data would be over the intern. and i thk that is perhaps wat s separateus fom our peers over the last two decades. if you watch, our competitors of 15 to 20 years ago all are gone. our competitors of 10 to 15 years ago, only one exists today in a major way. our competitors just a decade ago, great companies like al ale alkatel are a quarter of what they were a decade ago. those who wereripp and going beatus, hewlet packardnd numb of startups, at is time they're shrinking in terms of revenues and we're getting short at a very rapid rate. what we did charlie is realize we had to change. i had to do that on a positive note. there's nothing like a real imminent challenge to you to cause you to change the will. so as i alluded to, we've done this five or six times over my tenure. we know how to do it pretty well. we looked to see how much of it is macroinduced and how much is self inflicted, how long you think it's going to last, how deep it's going to be, deer than y thi. take a picture of what's going to come out and
, going to the cloud or change in technologies where data would be over the intern. and i thk that is perhaps wat s separateus fom our peers over the last two decades. if you watch, our competitors of 15 to 20 years ago all are gone. our competitors of 10 to 15 years ago, only one exists today in a major way. our competitors just a decade ago, great companies like al ale alkatel are a quarter of what they were a decade ago. those who wereripp and going beatus, hewlet packardnd numb of startups,...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 6, 2012
07/12
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the explosion of mobile technology. there are more people with cell phones than people with toilets. i mean just as a graphic comparison. so a lot of the attention at this moment is on how to accelerate the mobile technology to help the poor, whether it's mobile banking or, and held which we're doing a lot of work in. but we want to look at the next new thing and we think it is the digital technologies and how they will be applied. we have one of the inventors who will be showing what he's calling open source hardware. we've talked about open source software a lot but he is actually created technologies that will allow you to do in realtime manufacturing there some local village for what you need. so a doctor has a medical device that he or she needs. they are at some rural village thousands of miles from the local hospital. they can actually now-- will be able to, we think, 3-d manufacturing of the instrument they need onsite in order to treat that patient. it's revolutionary. >> what kinds of things have interested yo
the explosion of mobile technology. there are more people with cell phones than people with toilets. i mean just as a graphic comparison. so a lot of the attention at this moment is on how to accelerate the mobile technology to help the poor, whether it's mobile banking or, and held which we're doing a lot of work in. but we want to look at the next new thing and we think it is the digital technologies and how they will be applied. we have one of the inventors who will be showing what he's...
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Mar 21, 2012
03/12
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it's so much more than a new technology. it's a ditch way t different wad to show something so i really want to continue that and i have a long term documentary project that i want to do that's going to take years about architecture. and i'm also going to try and very simple story, a family story to tell that in this new language and see if i can't find the same affinity that i found between 3d and dancing. >> rose: thank you for coming. >> thank you very much. >> rose: it's always good to see you. >> thank you for having me. >> rose: the end of the world has long fascinated film makers from stanley queu kubrik from dr. strategy love. how would the world react to dooms day scenario. a new film by abel ferrara looks at what would happen if everybody knew the world was ending. it is called 4:44, last day on earth. here is the trailer. >> we were talking a lot how to deal with these final minutes. it doesn't matter where you live or how much money you have, we're all going to face the same fate at the same moment. >> 4:44 am, t
it's so much more than a new technology. it's a ditch way t different wad to show something so i really want to continue that and i have a long term documentary project that i want to do that's going to take years about architecture. and i'm also going to try and very simple story, a family story to tell that in this new language and see if i can't find the same affinity that i found between 3d and dancing. >> rose: thank you for coming. >> thank you very much. >> rose: it's...
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Dec 7, 2012
12/12
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perspective getting the guys to and from was one of the most unusual parts because they operate using technology that hasn't really been used before. >> rose: i should set this up for the audience at home who hasn't obviously seen the movie. this is a story how they would lead him to pakistan and a story about how they made a decision to go in and either capture or kill osama bin laden. there's are two different stories. >> and there's the story. >> there's a third story when they go in and actually do it. >> two for the price of one. >> rose: talk about the c.i.a. aspect of this. how long did it take them to get on the trail that would lead them somewhere? because we know that after 9/11 i mean they were all kinds of things going on with american national security people to get somebody to give some information as to where osama bin laden was, to get their hands on osama bin laden. >> well, i mean my humble opinion, mark did an extraordinary job of reporting this and then out of the reporting turning this into an incredibly dramatic screen play. i'm the recipient of that trying to transform tho
perspective getting the guys to and from was one of the most unusual parts because they operate using technology that hasn't really been used before. >> rose: i should set this up for the audience at home who hasn't obviously seen the movie. this is a story how they would lead him to pakistan and a story about how they made a decision to go in and either capture or kill osama bin laden. there's are two different stories. >> and there's the story. >> there's a third story when...